Economic Cost of Violence Containment

Economic Cost of Violence Containment

THE ECONOMIC COST OF VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT A COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT OF THE GLOBAL COST OF VIOLENCE QUANTIFYING PEACE AND ITS BENEFITS The Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit think tank dedicated to shifting the world’s focus to peace as a positive, achievable, and tangible measure of human well-being and progress. IEP achieves its goals by developing new conceptual frameworks to define peacefulness; providing metrics for measuring peace; and uncovering the relationships between business, peace and prosperity as well as promoting a better understanding of the cultural, economic and political factors that create peace. IEP has offices in Sydney, New York and Oxford. It works with a wide range of partners internationally and collaborates with intergovernmental organizations on measuring and communicating the economic value of peace. For more information visit www.economicsandpeace.org 2 Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4 THE cost OF VIOLENCE containment MAP 6 THE ECONOMICS OF peace 8 RESUlts 10 CASE stUDY: THE costs OF CONFLICT IN SOMALIA 19 CASE stUDY: THE costs OF CONFLICT IN IRAQ 20 CASE stUDY: THE costs OF CONFLICT IN Afghanistan 21 HOW THE cost OF global VIOLENCE containment IS calcUlateD 23 Categories USED to COUNT THE YEARLY cost OF VIOLENCE containment 24 METHODologY 24 Research Implications 28 REFERENCES 30 APPENDIX 1: ECONOMIC cost OF VIOLENCE literatURE REVIEW 32 Executive Summary One of the major challenges in developing policies aimed at thus it is nearly fully included in the study. Military spending increasing peace is the difficulty of being able to accurately constitutes 51 percent of the total accounted expenditure gauge the benefits that result from peace. Recognising on violence containment. However, the approach excludes this, the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) has many other forms of violence containment due to a lack of developed a new and ground breaking methodology available data. If other forms of violence were included in to estimate the cost of violence to the global economy, the overall estimate, it is expected that military spending including calculations for 152 countries that detail the costs would drop considerably as a proportion of total violence of thirteen different types of violence. containment expenditure. It is important to highlight This deeper insight into the breakdown of national costs that the world’s direct expenditure on the military is more of violence allows for better targeting of development than 12 times the world’s expenditure on foreign aid, as assistance and also enables national governments to more measured by Official Development Assistance (ODA). accurately assess the costs associated with violence and The economic impact of homicides represents the next the likely benefits that would flow from improvements in most significant cost at $1.43 trillion dollars or 15 percent of peace. the total impact. The third largest contributor is spending In developing this methodology IEP uses the concept on internal security officers and police, accounting for of ‘violence containment’ spending. IEP defines violence around 14 percent of the total, or $1.3 trillion dollars of the containment spending as economic activity that is related economic impact. to the consequences or prevention of violence where the The longer-term research project for IEP aims to violence is directed against people or property. categorise and count many of these relevant areas of This approach uses ten indicators from the Global Peace expenditure. Some examples of items that have been Index (GPI) and three additional key areas of expenditure excluded are: to place an economic value on 13 different dimensions. This process has been developed to enable relative comparisons The significant costs related to property crimes, motor between countries at different levels of economic vehicle theft, arson, household burglary and larceny/ development. GDP per capita has been used to scale the theft, as well as rape/sexual assault cost of violence containment for each country. In both the Many of the preventative measures, such as insurance U.S. and the U.K. a number of robust analyses have been premiums or the costs to businesses of surveillance conducted on the cost of various types of violence and equipment and lost management time have been used as the basis for the scaling. The direct costs of domestic violence in terms of lost This study is highly conservative as there are many wages, emotional costs and recovery costs. items that have not been counted simply because accurate data could not be obtained. Future estimates will attempt While expenditures on containing and dealing with the to capture these items and therefore are expected to be consequences of violence are important and a necessary higher. public good, the less a nation spends on violence-related The economic impact of violence containment to the functions, the more resources can be allocated to other world economy in 2012 was estimated to be $9.46 trillion more productive areas of economic activity. Simply or 11 percent of Gross World Product (GWP).* This figure put, economic expenditure on containing violence is is comprised of $4.73 trillion of direct and indirect costs as economically efficient when it effectively prevents violence well as an additional $4.73 trillion in additional economic for the least amount of outlay. However, money that is activity that would flow from the reinvestment of these diverted to surplus violence containment, or money that is costs into more fruitful economic activities. Were the world spent on inefficient programs, has the potential to constrain to reduce its expenditure on violence by fifteen percent it a nation’s economic growth. Importantly, many societies would be enough to provide the necessary money for the that have lower levels of violence and crime also have lower European Stability Fund, repay Greece’s debt and cover the violence containment spending. These societies reap a increase in funding required to achieve the United Nation’s peace dividend. Millennium Development Goals. This is because much of the expenditure on violence One of the easier items to count is military expenditure, containment is fundamentally unproductive, and if 4 The Economic Cost of Violence Containment redirected toward more productive pursuits, would Violence Containment Report, which will be updated improve government balance sheets, company profits and and enhanced periodically. The model used in this report ultimately, the productivity and wellbeing of society. will evolve over time as new data becomes available and Unfortunately, the potential short and long term better mechanisms are defined to estimate the likely costs. economic ramifications of conflict are often poorly Particular emphasis needs to be placed on accounting for understood prior to conflict. The U.S. interventions in Iraq the major items that are not currently covered. and Afghanistan underline how immediate political or strategic imperatives are usually the major determinants for decisions surrounding conflict. Furthermore, the impacts of conflict are no longer local. For instance, the 2003 invasion of Iraq resulted in sharp increases in the world price of oil, increasing energy costs for households and stunting world economic growth (Salameh, 2009). Although quantifying the economic costs of violence and its containment is important, this study also provides “Violence containment the necessary figures to develop a deeper analysis of the costs and benefits associated with various crime or spending is economic activity violence reduction programs. This study is unique in that it allows cross-country comparisons of the cost of violence, related to the consequences thereby allowing country by country comparisons of the economic impact of various international programs. The or prevention of violence findings also have important applications for business, government and the international community by informing: where the violence is directed Governments: allowing a greater insight into the costs against people or property” and likely benefits associated with their policies, both domestically and internationally. The international community: enabling a better understanding of the economic benefits that would flow from targeting peacebuilding through development assistance. The global Business: providing a more detailed profile of individual impact of violence countries so as to better understand peace and its containment is impact on corporate cost bases and markets. Civil society: promoting the economic benefits of peacebuilding initiatives, such as mediation and prevention programs centrally aimed at avoiding and resolving conflict. $9.46 TRILLION In addition, some of those countries that were found to have the highest expenditure on violence are also some of the poorest, with the cost of violence dwarfing ODA. Consequently, these findings clearly demonstrate to the international community the necessity of investing in peace with respect to international development frameworks, such as the UN’s Post-2015 Development Agenda. This is the inaugural release of the Global Cost of * All figures in this report are in US dollars, unless otherwise stated. 5 The world’s violence containment expenditure is more than 75 x FOREIGN AID EXPENDITURE If violence containment spending was reduced by 15% the world would save $1.4 trillion THE global cost of Violence containment AS % of GDP highest LOWEST EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURE

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